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Stalking Darkness

Stalking Darkness

Titel: Stalking Darkness Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Lynn Flewelling
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hand.
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    Across the channel, Seregil was about to do the same, but his torch was burning low. Pulling a fresh one from his belt, he paused to light it from the old one. “See anything?”
    “There’s nearly three inches of pin exposed up here,” Alec replied, clinging one-handed to the top of the bars.
    “I’m no expert, but that seems like a lot. How does it look?”
    “Like a metal pin.” Alec held his torch closer. “No marks or cuts. Hold on. Hey, it’s melting like wax and there’s—”
    “Be careful!”
    Searing white sparks erupted inches from Alec’s face with an angry spitting sound. With a startled cry, he dropped his torch and threw an arm across his face.
    “Alec! Alec, get down,” Seregil yelled.
    Alec crouched awkwardly, one leg jammed between the bars. Overhead, sparks still rained down from the sizzling corona of light.
    Dark spots danced in front of Seregil’s eyes as he launched himself across the channel. Grabbing Alec, he dragged him to the floor and tried to roll him onto his belly to smother the smoldering patches on his tunic.
    “My eyes!” Alec gasped, struggling away in pain and confusion.
    “Hold still,” Seregil began, but Alec’s foot found sudden purchase against the wall and, with a final lurch, he toppled Seregil backward into the icy channel.
    Fortunately, Seregil had the presence of mind to clamp his mouth shut as he went under. For a horrifying second he tumbled helplessly against the side of the channel, unable to find the bottom with his feet. Fetching up against the grate, he righted himself and used the crossbars to pull himself back onto the walkway.
    Sputtering and retching, he grasped Alec by the back of the tunic and hauled him out of range of the sparks, then held him forcibly still while the white light faded slowly to a small orange glow. One torch still burned, and by it he could see the thin pall of smoke curling lazily near the roof.
    Alec groaned again, hands pressed over his face. Fearing the worst, Seregil dug the lightwand from his sodden tool roll and pulled the boy’s hands away to inspect the damage.
    Alec’s hair and the vinegar mask had protected most of his face from the sparks, but half a dozen tiny blisters were already bubblingup on the backs of his hands. Tears streamed down his cheeks as he turned his head from the light.
    “Can you see anything?” Seregil asked anxiously.
    “I’m beginning to.” Alec pressed one sleeve across his eyes, then blinked. “Why are you wet?” A look of shocked realization slowly spread across his face. “Oh, no. Oh, Seregil, I’m sorry!”
    Seregil managed a tight grin, trying hard not to think about the water dripping down his face toward his mouth.
    “What was that light?” Alec asked.
    “I don’t know.” Going back to the grate, he climbed up to inspect the damage. “The pin is burned completely away, stonework cracked from the heat, top of the flange warped. And whatever it was, it must work on the other side, too, or you still couldn’t move the grate.”
    Jumping the channel, he gripped the handle of the lightwand between his teeth and climbed up to inspect the upper corner.
    “Tell me again what you saw.”
    Still blinking, Alec came across and picked up the torch. “I held the flame close to the pin, trying to see if it had been cut. It must have been the heat, because the surface of the pin began to melt and run like wax. I think I saw something white underneath, just before it flared up the way it did.”
    Craning his neck cautiously, Seregil found several inches of exposed pin between the flange and the stonework above. Using the tip of his dagger, he scraped gently at the surface of the pin. Curls of some black, waxy substance shaved off easily, revealing a white layer below.
    “You were right. A band of silvery white metal has been set into the pin.”
    The white substance cut easily as lead. Extracting a tiny sliver, he handed it down to Alec on the tip of his blade. “Put it on the floor and light it.”
    Alec set the sliver gingerly on the floor and, standing well back, held the torch to it. It burst at once into a brief, sputtering blaze of light that left black burns on the stone.
    Alec let out a low whistle. “Bilairy’s Balls, I think we found what we’re looking for.”
    “There must be enough iron in the center of the pin to strengthen it, but this stuff burns right through it.”
    “Is it magic?”
    Seregil cut away another small sample of

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